@article{Paliouras2002761, abstract = {Interest in the analysis of user behaviour on the Internet has been increasing rapidly, especially since the advent of electronic commerce. In this context, we argue here for the usefulness of constructing communities of users with common behaviour, making use of machine learning techniques. In particular, we assume that the users of any service on the Internet constitute a large community and we aim to construct smaller communities of users with common characteristics. The paper presents the results of three case studies for three different types of Internet service: a digital library, an information broker and a Web site. Particular attention is paid on the different types of information access involved in the three case studies: query-based information retrieval, profile-based information filtering and Web-site navigation. Each type of access imposes different constraints on the representation of the learning task. Two different unsupervised learning methods are evaluated: conceptual clustering and cluster mining. One of our main concerns is the construction of meaningful communities that can be used for improving information access on the Internet. Analysis of the results in the three case studies brings to surface some of the important properties of the task, suggesting the feasibility of a common methodology for the three different types of information access on the Internet.}, author = {Paliouras, G. and Papatheodorou, C. and Karkaletsis, V. and Spyropoulos, C. D.}, doi = {DOI: 10.1016/S0953-5438(02)00015-2}, interhash = {09a86e1d918007f3d2884a81184727a1}, intrahash = {572c9be2f7b7175d821d6c6f47bf265b}, issn = {0953-5438}, journal = {Interacting with Computers}, number = 6, pages = {761--791}, title = {Discovering user communities on the Internet using unsupervised machine learning techniques}, url = {http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/B6V0D-45SRKS8-2/2/b191948fb2eff336bae10efe9e3ed820}, volume = 14, year = 2002 }